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Landlords who don t insulate being hit with $3000 penalties

South Auckland tenant awarded $7k over illegal bedroom, roof leak, no insulation​In a ruling by the Gisborne​ Tenancy Tribunal on December 12, Cottle was ordered to pay his tenant $3300 in exemplary damages for failing to insulate during the tenancy that ended in September, but as the tenant had failed to pay $6450​ in rent, the landlord didn t have to hand over any money. Adjudicator K Goldsbury​ found Cottle s failure to insulate was an intentional act​, saying there had been a lot of publicity during Cottle s ownership of the house advising landlords of their insulation obligations and the timeframes. To impose exemplary damages, a tribunal referee must be satisfied a landlord has committed an intentional act, Goldsbury said.

More banks will increase investor deposit to 40pc, brokers predict

More banks will increase investor deposit to 40pc, brokers predict 16 Dec, 2020 04:00 PM 5 minutes to read Brokers believes other banks will follow the ANZ and increase the investor deposit requirement to 40pc. Photo / Michael Craig. Brokers believes other banks will follow the ANZ and increase the investor deposit requirement to 40pc. Photo / Michael Craig. It is inevitable that other banks will match the ANZ and increase their investor deposit requirements to 40 per cent say mortgage brokers. But the major banks say they currently have no plans to change the settings on their investor lending restrictions. On Tuesday ANZ NZ - the country s largest bank - announced it would increase its deposit requirements from 30 per cent to 40 per cent for investors effectively immediately.

Property investors not convinced by ANZ tightening lending

Property investors not convinced by ANZ tightening lending © RNZ / Claire Eastham-Farrelly Property investors do not think ANZ s moving to tighten lending to property investors will help other residential buyers - and some say the bank is just looking out for its own risk. ANZ says changing its rules is a way to bring some balance back into the market (file image). Photo: RNZ / Claire Eastham-Farrelly ANZ has announced it will now require residential property investors to have at least a 40 percent deposit, up from the current 30 percent. The bank also called for big, bold and urgent action to dampen the housing market, warning that house prices could be due for a correction in the new year if they continued to rise as they had.

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